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In the Jaws of the Black Dogs: A Memoir of Depression |  | Author: John Bentley Mays Publisher: HarperCollins Category: Book
List Price: $24.00 Buy Used: $0.13 as of 11/21/2009 18:16 MST details You Save: $23.87 (99%)
New (4) Used (37) Collectible (2) from $0.13
Seller: betterworldbooks_ Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 236959
Media: Hardcover Pages: 256 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6 x 1.1
ISBN: 0060192887 Dewey Decimal Number: 616.85270092 EAN: 9780060192884 ASIN: 0060192887
Publication Date: July 1, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description In this courageous memoir, John Bentley Mays gives us a riveting account of what it is to live in the shadow of debilitating depression. Weaving intimate recollections with excerpts from the diaries he kept for thirty years, Mays illuminates the struggle that leads to breakdown and the uneasy truce achieved through psychotherapy. Along the way, he offers provocative commentary on the allure of cure, the cultural scripts of normality, and the distorting mirror of clinical language. A literary tour de force that began with an award winning essay, In the Jaws of the Black Dogs is not an objective analysis composed from the safety of hindsight. It is a writer's attempt to evoke the silent and distorting malignancy--as well as the moments of reprieve--of the only life he has ever known. Above all, he offers readers hope: Although the black dogs cannot be entirely avoided, humor and the love and understanding of family and friends can keep the dogs at bay. From In The Jaws of the Black Dogs "This book is a life with the black dogs of depression. I have written it in a clearing bounded by thickets roamed by the killing dogs, sometimes wondering, in the writing, whether I would complete it before they returned on silent paws to snatch the text and me away. For the depressed can never be sure we can finish anything we begin, or indeed certain of anything, except the black dogs' eventual return, and their terrible circling of the clearing's edge. "There are a great many books about depression. This is not one of them. It is pain written, not observed; a depressive writer's writing, a testament transcribed from wounded flesh to paper in the clearing, before the black dogs' inevitable return."
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
A must read book October 10, 2009 RJ (San Diego,Ca) I have dealt with major depression all my life. This is the first book I have read that really got in to what it is like to live with this disease. Written by a person who lives with depression, not some researcher, or doctor. The book is also very well written. I leaned more from reading this book about my own depression than in years of therapy. This book should be mandatory reading for anyone in the mental health field, and especially anyone dealing with depression.
Letting the Dogs Out October 1, 2009 Rose Keefe (Canada) John Bentley Mays, visual arts critic of the Globe and Mail, suffers from chronic depression. 'In the Jaws of the Black Dogs' is his memoir of a life spent fighting the illness and its attending influences: emotional numbness and self-destructive urges.
Mays was born in the American South and lost both parents at an early age: his alcoholic father died under suspicious circumstances in 1947 and lung cancer killed his mother five years later. He could not weep at her death, an early sign of the disorder that he refers to as the coming of the black dogs. In 1968 he attempted suicide, leading to hospitalization and therapy. A good marriage, successful writing career, and firm religious faith anchored Mays somewhat and gave him much-needed doses of normalcy, but the black dogs continue to circle him, ready to rush in and bite without warning.
This is not a self-help book for coping with depression. The introverted approach and elliptical writing style make it a healing tool for the writer, not the reader. It's also not especially uplifting: there's no happy ending and Mays even admits in the forward that he is writing the book "in a clearing bounded by thickets roamed by the killing dogs, sometimes wondering, in the writing, whether I would complete it before they returned on silent paws to snatch the text and me away." But 'In the Jaws of the Black Dogs' is a brave and honest story of courage in the face of crippling mental illness.
In The Jaws of the Black Dogs August 6, 2009 Trina S. Cox (Mobile, Al USA) This book was very easy to follow and to understand. I am a fellow sufferer of depression and found the author's revelations very similar to my own feelings. I could easily identify with the anguish he felt and the devastation caused by the lack of understanding of this illness. It is nice to know that someone else in the world has experienced what I have been through. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and would recomment it to others who suffer similar afflictions.
From a Painfully Depressed Mind Comes a Warm & Honest Book! October 18, 2005 Aimee Thor (Xenia, Ohio) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I related to so many areas of John Bentley's life. As I read this book I was touched and inspired, and reminded that I am not alone in my perpetual existential crisis. A more refreshing look at depression has not come along in many years. A truly beautiful book that could save lives!
Too well written? December 6, 2004 KevinP (Canada) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
It's obvious from reading the first few pages that Mays is an extraordinary writing talent. This is not just another story from someone who suffers depression. It is so eloquently written that I had problems understanding what some of the words meant. His story is told in such vivid detail, with amazing use of the English language. A wonderful book, and very helpful to readers struggling with their own black dogs.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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